Archive for March, 2010

I-290 Resurfacing Begins

Tuesday, March 23rd, 2010
Interstate 290

Interstate 290

Those who use the Eisenhower I-290 expressway may want to start considering alternate routes or public transit as the Illinois Department of Transportation prepares to resurface 14 miles of the highway in Cook County between I-88 and the I-90/94 Circle Interchange. The project includes milling and resurfacing the driving surface, shoulders and all exit and entrance ramps, as well as repairs to nine bridges along the route. With frequent lane closures expected, IDOT has created a special project web site to help travelers plan to avoid delays. The web site is www.dot.state.il.us/I290/index.html. The project is expected to be completed by fall. For more information, comments, concerns or questions, visit the web site or call the Interstate 290 Resurfacing Project hotline 847.705.4696.

NABA Networking Event: Spring Into Action

Wednesday, March 17th, 2010

The North Avenue Business AssociationThe North Avenue Business Association (NABA) holds their Annual NABA Networks Event on Tuesday, March 23rd,2010 from 7 ’til 9 a.m. at the Charter One Bank, 6700 North Avenue, Chicago.

NABA will present its annual networking breakfast for business owners on/near North Avenue. Bring your business cards – Get to know your neighbors – Participate in the NABA drawing. Complimentary breakfast & surprises!

Parking will be available at Marantha Church lot (Oak Park & North Avenues). Please enter the bank at east side security door (1605 Rutherford).

Please RSVP to Wendy Tannenbaum by March 19th at: 773-622-4422.

Information about the City of Chicago’s Department of Business Affairs and Consumer Protection programs will be available at the NABA Networks Spring into Action Event. For information about Chicago’s Business Affairs & Consumer Protection programs and Business Works Seminars visit www.cityofchicago.org/bacp.

Public Safety in South Oak Park and on Roosevelt Road

Tuesday, March 16th, 2010

We received the following from our friend Paul Zimmermann.  For those of you who haven’t met Paul, he wears a couple of hats around these here parts.  Firstly, Paul and a friend have invested in the community – they own a couple of commercial properties.  Secondly, Paul is a passionate supporter of the Roosevelt Road corridor.  And finally he’s currently the President of the Berwyn Development Corporation (BDC).

An Open Letter to the Oak Park Village Trustees

Dear Board of Trustees

I am writing to you concerning the current situation in South Oak Park and on Roosevelt Road as concerns public safety. With the Oak Park Police Dept. having to cut manpower due to the Village budget crisis, for the last 2-plus years the residents and businesses of South Oak Park have had one Resident Beat Officer for this entire district, from Austin to Harlem and the Eisenhower to Roosevelt Road. This is a zone that deals with burglaries, armed robbery, assault and domestic violence in greater frequency than other Oak Park zones due to it’s proximity to the city of Chicago, and includes a neighborhood that still suffers the memory and affects of an unsolved murder. In a recent incident, two streetwalkers were apprehended on the Oak Park side of Roosevelt Road and while we applaud the resident who notified the Oak Park Police Department as well as the efforts of the officers on this incident, we feel that it is only a matter of time before the Resident Beat Officer will be stretched too thin and the criminal activity in the zone will result in a crisis that we would all like to avoid. To help alleviate the possibility of such a situation, we would like to strongly recommend the placement of a Police Substation on Roosevelt Road.

With the nearest satellite station on the north side of the expressway at Austin, we feel that a substation on Roosevelt would not only provide the officers of the Oak Park Police Department with an office space to use for filing reports and taking bathroom breaks, but it could also be used as a community meeting hall for easier communication between the residents, businesses and the Police Department. Furthermore, this substation could be a shared venture with the Police Departments of the neighboring communities of Berwyn, Cicero and Chicago. With all of these Departments sharing the station, the police presence alone would certainly go a long way towards reassuring residents and would most certainly push criminal activity out of the district. More communication between the officers of these neighboring communities could only help to quell the criminal element and create a safer neighborhood for all.

The start of the Roosevelt Road redevelopment project is, after years of fits and starts, finally approaching. The tenor of cooperation between the three municipalities involved in this exciting, long overdue makeover has never been better. Now is the time to make this commitment towards the long term safety and viability of the neighborhood and the business district. With Oak Park being the largest stakeholder on the corridor, we feel that the impetus for this substation must come from you. If we do the surface work but don’t address the underlying problems in the area, we are doing a disservice to those that we are claiming to help. We have all worked hard towards the success of this venture. Let’s make sure that we see it all the way through.

In cooperation,

Paul Zimmermann, President
Roosevelt Road Business Association

We urge the Oak Park Village Officials to give every consideration to this low-cost and highly effective solution as soon as possible!

From Neighbors – March 2010

Tuesday, March 2nd, 2010

Neighbors Magazine“I believe humans get a lot done, not because we’re smart  but because we have thumbs so we can make coffee.” (Flash Rosenberg)

“Old Bean.”

Tina Valentino is the Editor/Publisher of Neighbors Magazine

Tina Valentino is the Editor/Publisher

It’s an expression that hails from jolly, old England for manly men to use when referring affectionately to each other, such as buddy, pal, old chap, good fellow. Who knew? All along, I had been attributing an entirely different meaning to it. In fact, I knew a man in Melrose Park named Lou Orfei – most of his man-friends never called him Lou; they called him by his nickname, Old Bean. Now, I can say with great confidence and certainty that his lifelong pals, like Rocky, Phil, Tony, Al, Dom never touched a scone and their closest encounter with the U.K. would have been “just passing through” during the war.

Shot down once again by the Internet’s Wikipedia, I had been wrongly using my own warped syllogism all these years. I thought Bean meant your head, noodle, noggin or your “smarts.” Consequently, if you had an IQ that surpassed most of your friends and achieved great things, such as inventions and patents as Mr. Orfei did, then I assumed it warranted a nickname like Old Bean.

I think both definitions seem to apply quite aptly to the feature story in this issue on Aspire’s new company, CoffeeWorks. I have had a place in my heart for Aspire for many years; in fact, it was known as PARC then, Proviso Association for Retarded Citizens. As a child, I had neighbors who were much more than active volunteers—they were powerhouses of persuasion and purpose, committing themselves to getting non-existent programs off the ground and getting others to help bridge that gaping hole, more like a chasm, between their developmentally-disabled children and the rest of us. They never gave up hope.

As science and society progressed, the name changed from PARC to Aspire, to better serve those born with disabilities such as autism, cerebral palsy and Down’s Syndrome. Like the parents who founded PARC, Aspire President and CEO Jim Kales never gives up hope and his colleagues and surely many Aspire clients could think of him as Old Bean—a great guy with a big heart. But, as you will read in the  story, he has lived up to my definition of Old Bean—a man who used his head and who used sheer necessity to invent a company called CoffeeWorks. For Jim, it was about carpe diem, seizing the day. He couldn’t wait for the economy to improve or for the State of Illinois to find a few crumbs in our wasteful budget to throw his way to support Aspire’s life-changing  programs for the developmentally disabled. Jim Kales stepped up to the plate, took a chance and, while it may or may not stick, he earned my version of the expression Old Bean.

Every time someone buys a bag of CoffeeWorks coffee (which, as you will read in the story, is hardly your average Joe), you will have purchased not only the Number One roast in the country; you may inspire other local businesses “wake up and smell the coffee”; and one hundred percent of the proceeds will benefit Aspire and the people it serves who simply want out of life what most people only want out of their coffee: fullness.

Jury Duty Scam

Monday, March 1st, 2010

Here’s another scam from our friend Sharona…

Most of us take Jury Duty seriously, but  enough people skip out on their civic duty that a new and ominous kind of fraud has surfaced…

The caller claims to be a “Jury Coordinator”.  If you protest that you never received a summons for jury duty, the scammer asks you for your Social Security number and date of birth so he or she can verify the information and cancel the arrest warrant. Give out any of this information and bingo, your identity was just stolen.

Eleven States including Oklahoma, Illinois, and Colorado have reported this insidious swindle.  When someone calls and asks for information, be aware and stay safe.

The FBI and the federal court system have issued nationwide alerts on their web sites , warning consumers about the fraud.  And Snopes agrees!

Thanks Sharona!